Current:Home > ContactMerriam-Webster's word of the year definitely wasn't picked by AI -AssetBase
Merriam-Webster's word of the year definitely wasn't picked by AI
View
Date:2025-04-14 19:03:43
If what we search for is any indication of what we value, then things aren't looking great for artificial intelligence.
"Authentic" was selected as the 2023 word of the year by the Merriam-Webster dictionary, landing among the most-looked-up words in the dictionary's 500,000 entries, the company said in a press release Monday.
After all, this was the year that Chat GPT disrupted academic integrity and AI drove Hollywood actors and writers to the picket lines.
Celebrities like Prince Harry and Britney Spears sought to tell their own stories. A certain New York congressman got a taste of comeuppance after years of lying. The summer's hottest blockbuster was about a world of pristine plastic colliding with flesh-and-blood reality.
On social media, millions signed up to "BeReal," beauty filters sparked a big backlash and Elon Musk told brands to be more "authentic" on Twitter (now X) before deciding to charge them all $8 a month to prove that they are who they say.
2023 was the year that authenticity morphed into performance, its very meaning made fuzzy amidst the onslaught of algorithms and alternative facts. The more we crave it, the more we question it.
This is where the dictionary definition comes in.
"Although clearly a desirable quality, authentic is hard to define and subject to debate — two reasons it sends many people to the dictionary," Merriam-Webster said in its release. Look-ups for the word saw a "substantial increase in 2023," it added.
For a word that we might associate with a certain kind of reliability, "authentic" comes with more than one meaning.
It's a synonym for "real," defined as "not false or imitation." But it can also mean "true to one's own personality, spirit, or character" and, sneakily, "conforming to an original so as to reproduce essential features."
This may be why we connect it to ethnicity (authentic cuisine or authentic accent) but also identity in the larger sense (authentic voice and authentic self). In this age where artifice seems to advance daily, we're in a collective moment of trying to go back, to connect with some earlier, simpler version of ourselves.
The dictionary said an additional 13 words stood out in 2023's look-up data. Not surprisingly, quite a few of them have a direct tie-in to the year's biggest news stories: coronation, dystopian, EGOT, implode, doppelganger, covenant, kibbutz, elemental, X and indict.
Others on the list feel connotatively connected to "authentic," or at least our perception of identity in a changing age — words like deepfake, deadname and rizz.
This year, the data-crunchers had to filter out countless five-letter words because they appeared on the smash-hit daily word puzzle, Wordle, the dictionary's editor-at-large told the Associated Press.
That people were turning to Merriam-Webster to verify new vocabulary could be read as a sign of progress. After all, 2022's word of the year belied a distrust of authority: gaslighting.
veryGood! (14)
Related
- A White House order claims to end 'censorship.' What does that mean?
- American skier Breezy Johnson says she won’t race during anti-doping rules investigation
- Protesters at UN COP28 climate summit demonstrate for imprisoned Emirati, Egyptian activists
- Pakistan zoo shut down after man mauled to death by tigers, shoe found in animal's mouth
- Charges tied to China weigh on GM in Q4, but profit and revenue top expectations
- What to do if you can't max out your 401(k) contributions in 2023
- Shohei Ohtani agrees to record $700 million, 10-year contract with Dodgers
- Consumer product agency issues warning on small magnetic balls linked to deaths
- Why members of two of EPA's influential science advisory committees were let go
- A pilot is killed in a small plane crash near Eloy Municipal Airport; he was the only person aboard
Ranking
- Jamie Foxx gets stitches after a glass is thrown at him during dinner in Beverly Hills
- Man who killed bystander in Reno gang shootout gets up to 40 years in prison
- Sri Lanka experiences a temporary power outage after a main transmission line fails
- Texas Supreme Court temporarily halts ruling allowing woman to have emergency abortion
- All That You Wanted to Know About She’s All That
- US Coast Guard helicopter that crashed during rescue mission in Alaska is recovered
- Former Kentucky Gov. Julian Carroll dies at age 92
- Shohei Ohtani signs with Dodgers on $700 million contract, obliterating MLB record
Recommendation
Travis Hunter, the 2
Dozens of animals taken from Virginia roadside zoo as part of investigation
Technology built the cashless society. Advances are helping the unhoused so they’re not left behind
Packers have big salary-cap and roster decisions this offseason. Here's what we predict
Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily crossword puzzle, Hi Hi!
Cleanup, power restoration continues in Tennessee after officials say six died in severe storms
A woman is charged with manslaughter after 2 sets of young twins were killed in a 2021 London fire
The NRA has a surprising defender in its free speech case before the Supreme Court: the ACLU